If it isn’t strange enough that Dragonforce are playing their only headline UK show until the autumn and doing so in the smallest room in The Institute (this is partly explicable by the fact that it’s a Kerrang sponsored gig and their radio station is just up the road) then surely its verging on the downright weird that this show is being billed as an album release show for the astonishingly good “The Power Within” record, but the aforementioned opus isn’t on sale at the merch stand.
Not surprisingly, the small venue has resulted in a sold out show and most are in place to see London ’s Pythia. The symphonic power metal band feature four fellas dressed in armour and lead singer, the classically trained Emily Ovenden. Not being familiar with the classical world RTM hasn’t come across her before, but she apparently has sold half a million records.
It is immediately clear that she is the group’s star turn and songs like “Kiss The Knife” are lapped up by the crowd.
The lack of loud music being played through the PA before the bands is another of the evening’s oddities, so Dragonforce’s intro tape interrupts people talking amongst themselves. But once they are on, the sense of excitement is palpable.
Here is a band that were on the verge of a real mainstream breakthrough, but have undergone something of a rebuild. Frontman ZP Theart has gone, to be replaced by Marc Hudson, who was introduced to the world at their support shows with Iron Maiden last year.
Now they are back, and “The Power Within” is a bolt statement of intent. A fine power metal album, it is pompous (and that is a compliment), technically superb and catchy. Not surprisingly, since this is a launch show, a track from “…Within” kicks us off. “Die By The Sword," in many ways this is a song that sums up where Dragonforce are in 2012.
There are four more songs from the new album played, including the single “Cry Thunder” and the almost thrash in tone “Fallen World.” These mix comfortably with the older material like “Operation Ground and Pound” and “Fury Of The Storm.”
There are – it seems – some subtle changes from the last time we saw the band. Back in the those days you were highly likely to see guitarists Sam Trotman and Herman Li trying to trip each other up as they played their solo’s, this time they are playing it more straight – although whether this is a strategy or just because there is no space on the tiny temple stage remains to be seen. That said, this a group that still has tongues a little in cheeks and who are clearly having fun.
A fine evening that not even a string of technical issues could spoil, ends with us walking past some pop group we’ve never heard of that have been playing downstairs and out into the street, where somebody is handing out fliers for the live debut of I am I. This new bands singer? ZP Theart. In metal it seems, the more things change the more they stay the same.
Roll on the autumn tour.
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